Dear SIG members

A new version of the proposal "prop-124: Clarification on IPv6 Sub-Assignments" 
has been sent to the Policy SIG for review.

Information about earlier versions is available from:

https://www.apnic.net/community/policy/proposals/prop-124/ 
<https://www.apnic.net/community/policy/proposals/prop-124/>

You are encouraged to express your views on the proposal:

- Do you support or oppose the proposal?
- Is there anything in the proposal that is not clear?
- What changes could be made to this proposal to make it more effective?

Please find the text of the proposal below.

Kind Regards,

Sumon, Bertrand, Ching-Heng
APNIC Policy SIG Chairs

----------------------------------------------------------------------

prop-124-v002: Clarification on IPv6 Sub-Assignments

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Proposer: Jordi Palet Martínez
         jordi.pa...@theipv6company.com <mailto:jordi.pa...@theipv6company.com>


1. Problem Statement
--------------------

When the policy was drafted, the concept of assignments/sub-assignments
did not consider a practice very common in IPv4 which is replicated and
even amplified in IPv6: the use of IP addresses for point-to-point links
or VPNs.

In the case of IPv6, instead of unique addresses, the use of unique prefixes 
(/64) is increasingly common.

Likewise, the policy failed to consider the use of IP addresses in hotspots, or 
the use of IP addresses by guests or employees in Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) 
and many other similar cases.

Finally, the IETF has recently approved the use of a unique /64 prefix per 
interface/host (RFC8273) instead of a unique address. This, for example, allows 
users to connect to a hotspot, receive a /64 such that they are “isolated” from 
other users (for reasons of security, regulatory requirements, etc.) and they 
can also use multiple virtual machines on their devices with a unique address 
for each one (within the same /64).


2. Objective of policy change
-----------------------------

Section 2.2.3. (Definitions/Assigned Address Space), explicitly prohibits such 
assignments, stating that “Assigned ... may not be sub-assigned”.

https://www.apnic.net/community/policy/resources#2.2.3.-Assigned-address-space 
<https://www.apnic.net/community/policy/resources#2.2.3.-Assigned-address-space>

This proposal clarifies this situation in this regard and better define the 
concept, particularly considering new uses of IPv6 (RFC 8273), by means of a 
new paragraph.


3. Situation in other regions
-----------------------------

This situation, has already been corrected in RIPE, and the policy was updated 
in a similar way, even if right now there is a small discrepancy between the 
policy text that reached consensus and the RIPE NCC Impact Analysis. A new 
policy proposal has been submitted to amend that, and the text is the same as 
presented by this proposal at APNIC. Same text has also been submitted to 
AfriNIC, LACNIC and ARIN.


4. Proposed policy solution
---------------------------

Add a new paragraph after the existing one in 2.2.3
https://www.apnic.net/community/policy/resources#2.2.3.-Assigned-address-space 
<https://www.apnic.net/community/policy/resources#2.2.3.-Assigned-address-space>

Actual text:
2.2.3. Assigned address space
Assigned address space is address space that is delegated to an LIR, or 
end-user, for specific use within the Internet infrastructure they operate. 
Assignments must only be made for specific, documented purposes and may not be 
sub-assigned.

New text:
2.2.3. Assigned address space
Assigned address space is address space that is delegated to an LIR, or 
end-user, for specific use within the Internet infrastructure they operate. 
Assignments must only be made for specific, documented purposes and may not be 
sub-assigned.

The fact that a unique address or even a unique /64 prefix is non-permanently 
provided to third parties, on a link operated by the original receiver of the 
assignment, shall not be considered a sub-assignment. This includes, for 
example, guests or employees
(devices or servers), hotspots, and point-to-point links or VPNs.

The provision of addressing for permanent connectivity or broadband services is 
still considered a sub-assignment. Only the addressing of the point-to-point 
link itself can be permanent and that addressing can't be used (neither 
directly or indirectly) for the actual communication.



5. Advantages / Disadvantages
-----------------------------

Advantages:
Fulfilling the objective above indicated and making sure to match the real 
situation in the market.


Disadvantages:
None foreseen.


6. Impact on resource holders
-----------------------------

None

7. References
-------------

Links to RIPE policy amended and new policy proposal submitted.

Cordialement,
___________________________________________
Bertrand Cherrier
Administration Systèmes - R&D
Micro Logic Systems
b.cherr...@micrologic.nc <mailto:b.cherr...@micrologic.nc>
https://www.mls.nc <https://www.mls.nc/>
Tél : +687 24 99 24
VoIP : 65 24 99 24
SAV : +687 36 67 76 (58F/min)

*              sig-policy:  APNIC SIG on resource management policy           *
_______________________________________________
sig-policy mailing list
sig-policy@lists.apnic.net
https://mailman.apnic.net/mailman/listinfo/sig-policy

Reply via email to